Union leaders see changed landscape even if Dems prevail in 2012

WisPolitics:

Public employee union leaders Mary Bell and Marty Beil say the collective bargaining restrictions on their members enacted this year have galvanized the state’s labor movement and paved the way for victory in potential recall elections in 2012.
But even if Dems are swept into the governor’s office and the Senate majority, the union heads say they aren’t necessarily seeking a complete return to the way things were before February.
“There has to be some changes … has to be some tweaking there,” said Beil (left), executive director of the Wisconsin State Employees Union. “But certainly not tweaking in the areas of the unions being able to bargain collectively for wages, hours and working conditions.”
Bell, leader of the Wisconsin Education Association Council — the state’s largest teachers union — added she’s simply hoping for a collective bargaining environment that ensures the voice of workers and “whether that is the law we had or the law that we needed even then, I think, is the question.”
“But the most important piece of this is that if you’re going to make that kind of significant change, you do not do it without a conversation among the people that are affected,” Bell told a WisPolitics.com luncheon. “That’s what’s been so offensive about the last year.”